| </span><blockquote><span class="smallfont">Quote:</span><hr size="1" />Originally Posted by (m3talsmith,) </span><blockquote><span class="smallfont">Quote:</span><hr size="1" />Originally Posted by (Impenitent,) how many unarmed drug dealers do you know?<hr size="1" /></blockquote><span class='postcolor'>
...Make them legal and they're will be no need for "dealers". Every kid can grow it easy enough who want it. Instead what we have is that the only people who can afford to make them are the same one's who are willing to do illegal things and defend it.<hr size="1" /></blockquote><span class='postcolor'>
Like every kid in America has a basic knowledge of botany, cultivation practice and plant hormones when they're young. Give me a break, that's assuming that legalizing drugs would mean that the government would suddenly turn pro drug, which I doubt would happen, nor would I want it to. If one were to visit a harm reduction website such as DRCnet.org, then perhaps more intelligent assumptions concerning the future of our nation's drug policy can be made.
But isn't it interesting that most little children have a basic understanding of what guns do to people and how shooting up 'bad guys' is always the way to beat their video game? I'm not advocating to take away great games like counter-strike and desert combat, but rather suggesting that the combination of shootup games and the mode of thinking the youth displays amongst its peers and under the thumb of authority (from parental to institutional) should become an area of focus, and we should definitely give equal scrutiny to each side. |